Lama Tsongkhapa Day Celebration

This is the annual celebration of the life of Lama Je Tsongkhapa, Losang Drakpa (1357-1419), the founder of our lineage.

Kyabje Lama Zopa Rinpoche advises us to do:

extensive light offering practice

various praises and prayers by and about Lama Tsongkhapa such as

The Abbreviated Points of the Lam Rim

Prayer for the Flourishing of Je Tsongkapa’s Teachings

Lama Tsongkhapa’s Secret Biography

Rinpoche says:

“By offering lights, we create the cause of enlightenment, of liberation from samsara, and of the happiness of future lives. Also, success will happen in this life. Even if you hate happiness in this life, it will still come by the way.”

We will attempt to follow Rinpoche’s advice the best we can, beginning with:

the Light Offering Practice at 7pm, stringing up electric lights and lighting candles, then doing the offering meditation

Without doubt Lama Tsongkhapa is the one father of all the Victorious Ones, which means Manjushri. That is proven by logic and by stories about him. Strong, definite faith comes from hearing those many quotations in regard to him, principally from Guru Shakyamuni Buddha. In the Manjushri Root Text Buddha says, “After I have passed away, you will in the form of a child perform the actions of buddha.” Also Guru Shakyamuni Buddha said, “At that time a monastery called “Extremely Joyful” will be founded”, which refers to Gaden Monastery.

and

All
the buddhas of the ten directions abiding in the infinite pure fields
say, “Lama Tsongkhapa is a very brave-hearted bodhisattva, the holy
being who clarified the teachings of Nagarjuna and Asanga, the great
propagators of the profound and extensive teachings of Buddha.” Hence
(the epithet) “Tsongkhapa, the Dharma King of the three realms, Losang
Dragpa”.

At
one point, he studied and analyzed the entire Kangyur (bKa’-‘gyur) and
Tengyur (bsTan-‘gyur) – the translated direct teachings of Buddha and
their Indian commentaries. After that, at age 32, he wrote A Golden
Rosary of Excellent Explanation (Legs-bshad gser-phreng), a commentary
on Filigree of Realizations and thus on prajnaparamita. He synthesized
and discussed all twenty-one Indian commentaries. Whatever he wrote, he
substantiated with quotes from the entire span of Indian and Tibetan
Buddhist literature, comparing and critically editing even different
translations. Unlike previous scholars, he never shied away from
explaining the most difficult and obscure passages in any text.

If we look at his life of only 62 years, and consider how much he studied, practiced (including making tsatsa clay statues), how much he wrote, taught, and did retreats, it would seem impossible that anyone could do even one of them in a lifetime.